Read The Firefly Letters Online
Authors: Margarita Engle
Ships of stone in a Viking graveyard,
eerie Northern Lights
and golden cloudberries
gathered by little gray men
who guard the barns and cowsâ
the mysteries of the world are endless.
Once, when I was little,
I wandered away and got lost
in a wooded park
where I saw a forest spirit
playing music on his flute,
and later, after I had been rescued,
I told my father that I had met
the piping god Pan.
That is when my father decided
that I was meant
to be a writer.
He was not pleased.
When I asked my mother
to give me a room of my own
where I could be alone
to read and write poems,
she refused.
Writing was not considered ladylike
in a castle with plenty of room
for pianos and ballet.
The castle where Fredrika
spent her childhood
was haunted.
In the attic, there was a sword
that had beheaded a nobleman
during a war.
There were bloodstained clothes
beside the sword.
None of the servants would climb
up to the attic to fetch boxes or trunks
that had been stored
next to ghosts.
This house where I live
is haunted too.
It was built by slaves
who rebelled, and buried an overseer
inside the walls.
Papá has never been able to find
the skeleton,
but sometimes at night
I hear pitiful moans
and rattling chains.
It is either the ghost
or some poor child
from the slave ships
being driven
to market.
On one of our walks
we stop to rest on a hill
with a view of palm trees
waving in the distance.
Fredrika says she feels
like we have wings, and we are both flying
over the brilliant green earth.
Later, when we walk downhill
into a forest, we find ourselves surrounded
by trees that are slowly being choked
by strangler figs.
The strangler trees have branches
that wrap themselves like long skinny arms
around other trees.
Fredrika sketches sadly
while I wonder
what has happened
to our wings.
Cecilia coughs and gasps,
and I wonder if she needs fresh air,
so I ask Elena's parents to help me find
a simple home out in the countryside
where Cecilia can breathe clean sky
untainted by the smokestacks
of sugar mills.
Beni drives us in a carriage
that scurries over the hills
like a swift insect, or a spider.
Finally, we reach a thatched farmhouse
with a clean-swept earthen floor
and an outdoor kitchen
and the tranquil coziness
of a country home
where the people are poor
but hardworking
and filled with love
for one another.
Our hosts are peasants
from the Canary Islands,
a remote outpost
of volcanic, stony fields and vineyards
off the southern coast of Spain,
not far
from Morocco.
Our beds are hammocks.
The woman is up early
blowing a conch-shell trumpet
to call her husband and sons
in from the fields
for a simple breakfast
of fish, corn, and yams.
All the bowls, spoons, and cups
are made from gourds, the hard, dry fruit
of a calabash tree that grows near the house
along with every other variety of fruit tree
known in the tropics:
mango, sapote, mamey, tamarind,
and half a dozen different types of bananas,
some tiny, and others huge. . . .
It is a garden
of delightful scents
and enchanted flavors . . .
a garden that somehow
helps me revive
the old hope of rediscovering
lost fragments
of Eden.
My sore lungs find no relief
out in this wilderness
of dusty trails,
but I am happy to stay here
so far from the beaches
where ships deliver slaves
and so far from the mills
where vats of sugar
are stirred
like the brew of witches
in stories.
Fredrika plays with the children
who follow us constantly,
pretending that bunches of bananas
are clusters of little yellow chickens
peeking out from beneath
the leafy green wings
of their mother,
the banana tree.
I try to sketch
in Fredrika's notebook,
but my fingers are not accustomed
to copying the loveliness of brilliant flowers
and darting hummingbirds.
When the pencil breaks
I use a splinter of charcoal
from the cooking fire.
I do not care if my sketches
are rough and messyâ
drawing pictures on wings of paper
makes me feel like an angel of God
sketching plans for the creation
of an entirely new world,
one without sorrow or pain.
Fredrika tells me that my eyes
are suddenly sparkling with hope.
She gives me a sketchbook
and a pencil of my own.
Suddenly, I feel like an artist
or a magician.